Mexico's best-known ska and fusion band have been mysteriously quiet since they released the glorious LDA vs the Lunatics set five years ago, which famously included their Latin reworking of The Lunatics Have Taken Over the Asylum. Now they are back, with only five members of the old band featured in the new, expanded 10-piece lineup, but they still sound slick, distinctive and energetic, if no longer quite as experimental as in the past. This is a band who have always specialised in variety, and can switch seamlessly between styles, easing from brassy ska to hip-hop, then adding in anything from traditional Mexican styles to salsa, acoustic guitar passages or global influences. The best songs, such as Actitud Calle (Street Attitude) or La Patriota, match the shifting Latin and ska rhythms against sturdy vocals from Odisea Valenzuela, and are driven on by a four-piece brass section who suddenly switch to a Balkan theme on Nasdrovia, and end with a jazz workout on the angry Too Much Power, their one song in English. This is a band famous for their outspoken views, so it's unfortunate that there are no translations of their Spanish lyrics.